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Judicial
Judgments.
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Skinny Shoestring eBooks are written for people who want to build a business, but who have limited resources. Practical strategies that really work. No shady marketing tactics, no hype, just helpful information and straight instructions to get you started right. Business startup, making money online, marketing, building a website, writing for the web, and more.
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Rating: 
Level of
Review: Researched.
Overview:
Book on making money collecting on Judicial
Judgments.
Product:
Their product is a book. Yours is
collections.
Cost: $19.95
and up.
Compensation:
Commission on collections.
Conclusion:
Supposedly you can make money by collecting money
from people who have refused to pay money owed from
small claims judgments. There are several problems
with this theory.
First, the bit
awards may have private detectives working on
them.
Second, there
aren't that many small ones, even in large areas.
Third, these are
people who refused to pay when the court told them
to. How are YOU going to persuade them to cough up?
Finding them is not enough. You don't get paid
unless they pay.
Fourth, you have to
get a contract with the person who is owed the
money. Some will be willing to pay, some
not.
This has too many
IFs, and not enough payoff for the hard
work.
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Our Rating System:
No program is right for everyone.
Even a rating of four or five does not indicate that you should
dive in without some careful thought and consideration. Business
is still risky. All reviews have the reasons for the rating
clearly defined.
    -
Information presented in program is accurate and factual concerning
the potential of the program, program is based on sound business
principles, and has good potential to provide stable income
for individuals to whom the program is suitable.
   -
Information is accurately presented, company focuses on selling
product, but business is either more confusing, less predictable,
or slightly higher risk for one of a number of reasons. Still
considered a sound company and very acceptable risk.
  -
Information may be confusing or misleading, company may have
significant issues with program structure, support of product,
or public perception and reputation. A rating of three does
not mean you should not do it. It just means you need to be
sure you are suited to overcoming the difficulties that the
program has.
 -
Information generally misleading, risk fairly high, many unanswered
questions, business principles questionable, but still has some
potential for actually working for some people.
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Cannot declare that it is an outright scam, but potential for
it to work is very low. Will have questionable business theory,
bad reputation, excessive hype that is not backed up by common
sense, or other aspects which indicate very high risk. Will
always have multiple issues, not just one thing.
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Outright Scam. Anything labeled this way is never worth any
kind of risk.
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